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Informationen zum Autor Lori M. Campbell is a lecturer in the Department of English at the University of Pittsburgh, where she teaches courses on nineteenth- and twentieth-century literature. Donald E. Palumbo is a professor of English at East Carolina University. He lives in Greenville, North Carolina. C.W. Sullivan III is Distinguished Professor of arts and sciences at East Carolina University and a full member of the Welsh Academy. He is the author of numerous books and the on-line journal Celtic Cultural Studies. Klappentext Fantasy writing, like literature in general, provides a powerful vehicle for challenging the status quo. Via symbolism, imagery and supernaturalism, fantasy constructs secondary-world narratives that both mirror and critique the political paradigms of our own world. This critical work explores the role of the portal in fantasy, investigating the ways in which magical nexus points, and movement between worlds, are used to illustrate real-world power dynamics, especially those impacting women and children. Through an examination of high-low fantasy, fairy tales, children's literature, Gothic literature, and science fiction, the portal is identified as an object (or person) of profound metaphorical and cultural significance. Zusammenfassung Explores the role of the portal in fantasy! investigating the ways in which magical nexus points and movement between worlds are used to illustrate real-world power dynamics! especially those impacting women and children. Through an examination of high an Inhaltsverzeichnis Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Preface Introduction PARTWomen and Other Magical Creatures: Portals in Romance and Fairy Tale1. Who "Wears the Pants" in Faërie? The Woman Question in William Morris's The Wood Beyond the World 2. "For I am but a girl": The Problem of Female Power in Ford Madox Ford's The Brown Owl PARTCharms, Places, and Little Girls: Portals in Children's Literature3. E. Nesbit and the Magic Word: Empowering Child and Woman in Real-World Fantasy 4. Lost Boys to Men: Romanticism and the Magic of the Female Imagination in J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan and Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden PARTHaunted Houses and the Hidden Self: Portals in the Gothic, Low Fantasy, and Science Fiction5. Confronting Chaos at the In-Between: William Hope Hodgson's The House on the Borderland 6. The Society Insider/Outsider and the Sympathetic Supernatural in Fantastic Tales by Edith Wharton and Oscar Wilde PARTHaunting History: The Portal in Modern/Postmodern Fantasy7. One World to Rule Them All: The Un-Making and Re-Making of the Symbolic Portal in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings 8. Harry Potter and the Ultimate In-Between: J.K. Rowling's Portals of Power 9. Portals Between Then and Now: Susan Cooper, Alan Garner, Diana Wynne Jones, Neil Gaiman, and Jonathan Stroud Chaper Notes Bibliography Index ...